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Video games not quite career for this champ

By Thane Grauel, The (Westchester, N.Y.) Journal News

After two years of college, Jason Dourlaris had a plan that sounded pretty much like any parent's nightmare — take a year off to play video games.

But his Blauvelt, N.Y., family supported the scheme to turn a three-hours-a-day hobby into something of a career. It's not like the 21-year-old dropped out of school altogether — he earned an associate's degree in computer support services and plans to pursue a bachelor's degree.

"In the beginning, I thought he was wasting his time," said his father, Dino Dourlaris, who remembers asking his son years ago what he really wanted — a minibike? A moped?

The answer was computer games.

"But Jason took the leap and got into it big-time," he said.

It's paying off.

Jason Dourlaris is the national champ at his game, "Unreal Tournament 2003." He won the title after going undefeated in the August U.S. qualifier in Irvine, Calif., for the World Cyber Games. That was his ticket to the October worldwide event in Seoul, South Korea, where he placed second in a team competition (the Netherlands beat the United States) and fifth in one-on-one.

"I've made $13,000 to $15,000, got a computer, been to almost every state in the U.S. and to Canada and Korea — for clicking a mouse," Jason Dourlaris said. "I have no complaints."

Half of Americans play

A 2002 survey by the Entertainment Software Association found that half of all Americans play computer or video games. The average player's age is 29.

Many are hooked on a relatively new phenomenon — online gaming. That's where people start up their favorite game on their computer and use the Internet to play against others. These days, players can wear headsets with microphones to coordinate team play and chat, or to scream and curse at opponents from across the globe. The action can be as addictive as it is exciting.

Dourlaris started online gaming about seven years ago with a 56K modem. He found the real-time interaction with other players thrilling. He was hooked.

He now has a cable hookup and plays "Unreal Tournament" under the name Stryfe. The game is a futuristic shoot-'em-up, where players scramble for the best weapons and other goodies while dodging opponents' fire.

Propped on a bookshelf opposite his computer is his latest pay-off, a huge game-show-variety check for $5,000. It's his winnings from the October event in Seoul. The real money came via electronic transfer.

"It's the Olympics of gaming," he said. "It couldn't be more professionally organized."

His winnings aren't a bad chunk of change for a guy who takes tolls from truckers at the New York State Thruway Authority.

Talented players such as Dourlaris are finding that gaming can be lucrative. Steadily increasing prize money is driven by the multibillion-dollar gaming industry.

Because software companies and chip makers need young stars and tournaments to showcase their products, sponsorships are becoming more common.

Some event organizers hope to make professional gaming another sport people watch on cable television, buy tickets to see or even wager on online.

Not favored to win

Dourlaris will next play competitively in Las Vegas Jan. 8-11 at the Cyber X Games. The competition is new, but as president Joe Hill pointed out, it already has $600,000 in prize money lined up.

"Unreal Tournament" is just one of the games at the competition. Its top prize is $15,000. "Counter-Strike," a hugely popular game pitting terrorists against counter terrorists, will bring the biggest prize: $100,000.